Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

The Self as Permeable Membrane Between Worlds

Rumi's understanding of the lover as a vessel for divine presence reframes the human self as a permeable boundary between material and spiritual worlds.

Rumi
Why It Matters

Rumi teaches that the lover becomes empty so the Beloved can fill them—the human self becomes a clear channel for divine presence. Animism teaches something parallel: humans are not separate from nature but porous boundaries through which energy and consciousness flow. Indigenous practices recognize that we breathe the air that trees exhale, drink water that has cycled through countless beings, eat plants and animals that become our flesh. The boundary between self and world is permeable, not absolute. Many shamanic traditions cultivate this understanding explicitly, learning to allow other-than-human consciousness to move through them. A shaman may speak with an animal's voice, channel an ancestor's wisdom, or perceive through a plant's awareness. This is not possession but recognition of the self's fundamental permeability. Rumi's mysticism honors this too: the dervish who empties themselves becomes a conduit for divine love. By cultivating awareness of our own permeability—feeling how nature flows through us and how we belong to nature's flows—we begin to experience ourselves as the animistic traditions always have: not isolated egos but nodes in a vast web of relationship, porous to forces and beings beyond our individual will.

Helpful guides
Rumi
Faith & Meaning
Peri
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